Friday, May 31, 2013

MnDOT and Mathy Open House for Main Street with Detours

Eyes on Main Street - May 30, 2013

Representatives from MnDOT, WHKS, and Mathy were present to discuss the main street reconstruction. The plan is to begin on Monday, June 2 with phase 1. I (Saundy) was at the meeting and want to make sure everyone knows what is going on. 

I talked to several people including Jeffrey Bunch - MnDOT District 6 Project Manager, Andy Marinelli - Mathy Project Manager, Steve Pierce - Mathy Onsite Manager. and Tim Hruska - city engineer from WHKS. A lot of information was shared, however only a few people were there. The main thing I learned was the detours. I took pictures of the detours; however, they were unclear so I located plans from when I was Mayor and most detours did not change a whole lot, so I am attaching those plans below. 

Their goal is to have the utility portion completed by the end of August with the street open with no detour by mid September. However, construction will still be happening including lane closures as the final layers are place. The final completion goal is in October. Each section will begin with the removal of the roadway. The next step is removal of the sidewalk with new sidewalk being created as soon as possible. There will be a weekly closed construction meeting, however, Kristin Kammueller, MnDOT Community Liaison, will keep the public informed. Also remember to talk to your council members to find out information and to encourage them to share with the public. 

The four phases include the following:

Phase 1 - Ivy Grove/Legion to the middle of the Fire Hall
Phase 2 - Middle of Fire Hall to edge of Marv's
Phase 3 - Ivy Grove/Legion to Roble's Funeral Home
Phase 4 - Division Intersection and Maple Drive

Phase 1












Phase 2







Phase 2 A

Phase 2 B


























Phase 3













Phase 4

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

May 22 - City Council Recap

Eyes on Main Street - May 22, 2013

There is a preconstruction meeting this Friday that Paul Morken and Robert Vogel are attending in Winona. The projected project start date is June 3. The public open house with MnDOT and Mathy is in room 103 at Spring Grove Communications on Wednesday, May 29, 5-7:00 pm. This room is at the end of the hall using the library entrance

Mike Bubany, David Drown Associates, discussed the General Obligation Bonds for the Main Street Project. "Combining the impact of the increased taxes and utilities, the average home will be impacted by approximately  $25.15 per month. We had projected between $20-$30 per month in earlier meetings, so we are right on target under today's interest rate market. This amount is subject to change if interest rates rise or fall before the sale date."

Interest rates went up slightly this week making it $25.60 per month.

David Drown Associates, Inc. recommends the bonds be sold through a competitive process to ensure the lowest overall cost of borrowing. Key elements of financing would be:

  • February 1, 2034 final maturity.
  • Callable anytime after 2/1/2021 at par plus accrued interest.
  • Offer up to 1.25% discount allowance.
  • Standards and Poor's Rating.
  • Full Continuing Disclosure.
The council passed the resolution to issue the bond. On June 18 the Sale of the Bond Issue begins with closing on or around July 8, 2013. The first Bond payment will be due February 2014.

There is currently $150,000 left in the contingency fund for the project.




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Monday, May 20, 2013

Construction Update - May 29 from 5-7 at Spring Grove Communications room 103

Eyes on Main Street - May 20, 2013

The following news release just arrived, make sure to attend!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The following was sent to media in Fillmore, Houston, and Winona counties and Wisconsin, State Patrol and the Houston County engineer.

Public meeting about Highway 44 construction project in Houston County set for May 29

ROCHESTER, Minn. – The public is invited to learn more about the Highway 44 resurfacing project from Spring Grove to Highway 52 and the reconstruction project in Spring Grove at an open house Wednesday, May 29.
                                            
The open house is scheduled for 5 - 7 p.m., at Spring Grove Communications, 166 West Main St., Spring Grove, Minn.

Representatives from the Minnesota Department of Transportation and Mathy Construction, will be available to answer questions and provide information on the construction schedule.

To request an ASL or foreign language interpreter, or other reasonable accommodation, call Janet Miller at 651-366-4720 or 1-800-657-3774 (Greater Minnesota); 711 or 1-800-627-3529 (Minnesota Relay). Alternatively, send an email to janet.rae.miller@state.mn.us. Please request at least one week in advance.

Friday, May 17, 2013

Happy Syttende Mai

Eyes on Main Street - May 17

Happy Syttende Mai - enjoy your weekend.

There is not much new to report. The only main street item mentioned at the last council meeting was that there was no update. It sounds like construction will not begin on May 20 unless something changes. The next council meeting is on May 21 and Mike Bubany will present on the bonding. Hopefully more information on construction will be heard at this meeting. 

I am going back and adding this photo taken right after the parade during our Syttende Mai celebration.
Taken from a boom truck by Kathrine Myrah after the Syttende Mai parade on May 18, 2013. 



Friday, May 3, 2013

Next Council Meeting is on May 7

Eyes on Main Street - May 3, 2013

There is a council meeting next Tuesday, May 7 and the main street project is not on the agenda. However, I would think the topic will be discussed since construction is supposed to start this month (unless the snow continues). It is important to continue to attend council meetings. As we hear more updates, we will let you know. Also if you have any photos to share, please share them with us. You can email us at sgmainstreetproject@gmail.com.

Sunday, April 28, 2013

The Last Main Street Project - Notice the Horses

Eyes on Main Street - April 28, 2013

The Last Main Street Project. 1939.. (notice the horses!)

Under the top photo its says: "Digging Up Main Street. In 1939, Main Street was paved and curbs and gutters were laid on all residential streets. Electricity, water, and sewer facilities were also installed. From the Spring Grove Herald:  Henry Fladager does not agree with those who claim good roads will work to the disadvantage of the country town merchant in carrying away local trade to the larger city. He says the home merchant need not lose  his place in the sun if he will only wake up and go after business like the city stores and mail order houses do. The home merchant must buy right, advertise liberally, keep at it consistently, tell the public what he has and describe honestly and fully and adopt more modern methods of merchandising."

Below the bottom photo it says "Road Construction. Shown here is a section of road being dug out at the east-end of town, which would eventually become Highway 44. This was extremely rough work, especially for the horses. Loads of rock were thrown into the wagons, and the men would push the animals to such an extent that they would literally die on the spot, either to be buried or left on the side of the road. A new horse would then be brought forward. This cycle continued until the Herculean task was done. The company hired to do this work was called Stark & Clark."

Friday, April 26, 2013

History Lesson on Spring Grove Main Street

Eyes on Main Street - April 26th


Here is a short history lesson written by Robert Vogel last September. There are a few additions by Georgia Rosendahl and Saundra Solum. 

Spring Grove’s Main Street was laid out when the village was platted in 1859.  The street originally dead-ended in front of Trinity Lutheran Church (where it interested the old Brownsville & Decorah Road, which followed modern-day Maple Drive and Stage Road). Georgia said it was a stage coach road so it veered on the North Side of the city park. Remember the original church was on the north end of the Trinity Lutheran Church lot. 

According to Percival Narveson, "It was largely through the efforts of Mons Fladager that the main business section of Spring Grove was located where  it is.  Previous to 1859 the town was strung out for over half a mile east and west on the territorial road.  With the coming of the railroad in 1879, Fladager platted his land and sold lots, and through his efforts the railroad company abandoned its plan of building a station in Smith's Grove and erected it a quarter-mile west.  Thereafter, Smith's Grove gradually was abandoned." 

The first downtown sidewalks were installed shortly after the village was incorporated in 1889 but these structures deteriorated quickly and in 1939 the village council decided to replace them with concrete.

State Highway 44 was established by the state legislature in 1920 as part of Minnesota’s original trunk highway system.  It followed existing wagon roads between Caledonia and Mabel.  The rural portion of the highway was graded and graveled to a 30 ft. width by the state in 1926; the Main Street segment was dirt-surfaced until 1940, when the state laid the last sections of bituminous pavement on TH 44 between La Crescent and US Highway 63 south of Spring Valley. 

Spring Grove built its municipal sanitary sewer system in 1930.  The system was designed by Druar and Milinowski, consulting engineers, whose offices were in the old Globe Building in downtown Saint Paul.  (Arthur Milinowski was the son of German immigrants and a Harvard man; John Druar was a New Yorker who took his civil engineering degree at Cornell University.)  The sanitary sewer lines were laid in hand-dug trenches running down Main and the side streets.  (The village had had a rudimentary water system since the early 1900s and new cast-iron water main was laid under Main Street when the municipal water works was established in 1927.)  The interest rate on the sewer bonds was 5-1/2%, which prompted the village to call in the 1930 bonds and issue $16,000 worth of new bonds at a lower interest rate in the summer of 1941.  The first wastewater treatment plant was not built until 1940.

Highway 44 was reconstructed through Spring Grove between 1938 and 1941 as part of several different infrastructure projects.  The state surveyed the rural portions of the highway in 1938 and surfaced the highway with bituminous paving at a cost of over $316,000.   The Main Street segment of the TH 44 improvement cost approximately $50,000 and was financed in part with a $22,500 federal grant from the Public Works Administration, which was the agency responsible for implementing Franklin Roosevelt’s financial stimulus program during the Great Depression; this project was administered out of the PWA office in Omaha, NE, with the state highway department responsible for design; the city council handled much of the local project administration and paid for its share of the project with funds raised from a $20,000 bond issue.  The federal government appropriated $38,729 for the project, which represented about 40% of the total cost.  Unfortunately, none of the entities involved kept particularly detailed or accurate financial records, so it’s a little hard to come up with a total cost for the original Main Street improvements—probably somewhere in the neighborhood of $60,000, I would guess.  (To adjust for inflation, multiply the historic figures by 20 and you will be close.)  The paving was reinforced concrete, 44 ft. wide (this is the average street width) and 8 inches thick.  The plans and specifications included installation of water mains, storm and sanitary sewer as well as improvement of the highway and side streets.  At the same time as the TH 44 project, Spring Grove undertook several other public works projects involving street grading and paving, storm sewer construction, sanitary sewer system improvements, and an entire new system of water connections; this work was coordinated with the highway project and it was also funded with a mix of city bonding and federal grants.  The sewer and water work, as well as paving of side streets, was done under the auspices of the US Works Progress Administration, a New Deal work relief program that provided jobs to the able-bodied unemployed.  (Under the WPA regulations, Spring Grove would have been required to pay for the cost of materials and equipment; the federal government paid labor costs.)  The WPA’s concrete paving is holding up well on 1st, 2nd, and 3rd avenues and on the streets surrounding Viking Park.  The work began in 1939 and was completed in 1941.  Old photographs indicate modern street lights were installed sometime after World War II (the village has  had street lights downtown since the 1890s).  The present cobra-style light standards appear to be of 1960s vintage.  Some of the old late-1940s era street lights are still standing on Maple next to the park and near the school.

The original Highway 44 reconstruction did not extend very far east of the city park.  The present route of Highway 44 east of Maple/Division was surveyed in the 1920s, a few years after the park had been established.  The segment of TH 44 between downtown Spring Grove and Caledonia was rebuilt shortly after World War II.  Much of the work in Spring Grove appears to have been done by the state between 1945 and 1949.  In 1979 TH 44 between Spring Grove and Mabel was widened.  There were some improvements made to Main Street by the state highway department in 1988 and the water connections (but not the mains) were replaced up and down Main Street around this time.  MnDOT records show a mill and overlay of Main Street between 3rd Ave. NW and 4th Ave. NE in 1998.

In 2012, Main Street is over 150 years old.  The underground utilities are between 82 and 71 years old (some of the water main may be even older).  The water connections from the mains to inside the buildings is about 44 years old.  The present road surface is 73 years old.  Very little of the original concrete sidewalk laid in 1939-40 remains.